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Wednesday, April 30, 2014

My new printer which I planned on doing this blogpost about, but UPS says that the printer will not be delivered until friday. As blog posts for english are due on friday nights, it would be cutting it rather close doing that. So, as I have just sold my printer I decided to do this post on the cost of 3D printing.

To start I tallied the the cost when I first got into 3d printing. The cost was $410, about $360 for the Printrbot Simple with volume upgrade, $20 in shipping, and $30 for a roll of filament. Throughout owning my printer I bought an additional two spools which totalled $60, then I bought a broken Filastruder for $60, and spent about $25 fixing it. This brings my total $555. This sounds like a lot of money, and it is. However, I just sold my Printrbot for $330, this is actually more than I though I would get for it, but it makes sense. I sold it fully assembled, and included about 2 kilos of filament. Although I have not sold it, if I sold my Filastruder right now I could get just about $200 for it, possibly more. My assets (the filastruder, and Printrbot Simple) have a combined value of about $530. Thus if I quit printing, got up, and left this hobby, and I hadn't of bought my new printer. The hobby of 3D printing would only have costed me $25. Which isn't that expensive at all, I have had so much fun making things, designing, and building. All these numbers are completely thrown out the window as soon as I bought a newer, more expensive 3D printer. However, because I plan on keeping my Filastruder the cost of owning this printer is very low, less than $6 a month. To me this is a lot better and more fun than buying a new Xbox or similar things.

Friday, April 25, 2014

Well, I am finally getting a new printer. Don't get me wrong, I love my current printer. However, it does have some problem: it is to small, lacks a heated bed, and has a single extruder. The size is a problem as some of my projects (currently a chocolate extruder) require more space. The seven inch height, and the seven inch length are not a problem at all, however the four inch width is a major problem for me. Its nearly no use having 3 extra inches in length because most of my objects are circle or square in shape. My second problem with my printer is lack of a heated build plate. For those of you who do not know, a heated build plate is the building platform of printer that is heated. Heat helps because it makes objects not warp as they cool, and opens up the ability to use materials other than PLA. My final problem with my current printer is the lack of a second extruder, what a second extruder does is allow you to build things of any geometry, currently I have to have a completely flat bottom, and no angles below about 20 degrees.

I have been looking for a printer that fits all my requirements for about a month now, it is quite hard to find one for the right price. I have been checking Ebay for about a month looking for the right printer. A lot had a heated build plate and were the right size, but lacked a dual extruder which was a major requirement. I continue to check for about a month until I found the perfect one.

I found a Prusa i2, it a RepRap printer that had been modified to carry a second extruder. Before I get more into the printer, I'll explain what the RepRap project is. It is a project to create humanities first self replicating machine that can print most of it's own parts. What printing you own parts allows you to do is easily create another one and upgrade your current printer, to add for feature, functionality, or make it look better. It also runs on open source, low cost electronics. Say for instance that you want to add another extruder, you would design the upgrade, print it, then upgrade your electronics which is usually as simple as wiring in another stepper driver, and tweaking the firmware. One of the other great things about the RepRaps, is every single part is available for download for free. So, you can print parts for another RepRap. I'm pretty excited for it, it should get here on Monday through Friday, so my next blog post will be about it likely.

Onto the specs on it, it has a dual extruder, eight by eight build platform, and a heated bed. I plan to modify the second extruder to a one mm nozzle size, this is huge for a printer, the nozzle of the other extruder will be .4 mm. I have also written some g-code for it which allows the extruder to have different temperatures. What this allows me to do is use my higher resolution .4 mm nozzle on the perimeter using PLA, and my one mm nozzle on the infill, and for support structures. I will infill it with ABS, which is soluble in acetone. What this does is make my prints food safe, and prettier to look at on the outside, while the inside is really strong(ABS is around 3 times stronger than PLA), all while being much faster.

Friday, April 11, 2014

My blog is currently at 999 views, so I though that it would be a great time to write about all the stats of my blog.

To start I am going to cover the most viewed articles. By far my most viewed articles was a guide on how to smooth PLA prints with Dichloromethane, that post got 40 views. This is likely because at the time of writing it, it was the most in-depth guide on how to smooth PLA prints. My next highest scoring was Why I Really don't Have a Girlfriend, this post received about 22 views. It is like this post, but for the statistics of why I don't have a girlfriend. After that the next post was a review of the Printrbot Simple, it received 20 views. My forth highest scoring blog post Last Minute Valentines Prep, it received just 15 views.

Analysis
It becomes clear that the most favored blog posts, are the ones that deal with 3d printing and the ones that deal with relationships. However, the only 3d printing blog posts that are successful are the ones that deal with specific guides(usually through my own experimentation). Any of the posts that were about general 3d printing, tended to score the lowest, at just 3 page views each. This makes sense, people might do a specific search for how to smooth PLA prints with dichloromethane. Then as their are very few other sources, my relatively unpopular blog can appear nearer to the top of Google. The other posts that scored high are about relationships, or Valentines day. Even though the Valentines one turned into more of a 3d printing post(as everything I write somehow does). This to makes sense because the audience of my blog are split into two main sectors, school friend and random people on the interweb who want to learn of 3d printing. Teenagers(my school friends) are borderline obsessed with relationships, thus anything that even slightly pertains to relationships, they are more likely to click.

Other Random Stats

I am proud to announce the the most popular browser used to access my page is Google Chrome, Internet Explorer A.K.A. the browser most preferred by cavemen, only took up 8% of the total browser usage.

I am sad to say that the majority of my viewers use a Mac(55%), but this does make sense as all of our school computers are Macs. Windows, took up far less, at just 28% Also, another sad fact, the most popular mobile operating system to access my page was IOS, at 28 views, and a mere 19 views from Android.

I have 20 views from Germany(no idea why).

My biggest single traffic source is Vampire stat(a spambot), which accounts for nearly 15% of my page views, the second biggest single traffic source is my friend Devon's blog at just 3%.

Friday, April 4, 2014

This week has been quite eventful and exciting, new quadcopter, and I finally got the Filastruder working.

Filastruder
Today, I finally got in my non-flexible motor coupling. I have been working for the past month attempting to get my Filastruder working, My first try I used a flexible coupling, but it ended up not being able to work under the extreme pressure required, and nearly unspirled itself. After that happened, I found a much stronger coupling and ordered that. It was from China, so it took nearly two agonizing weeks to get here. Once it arrived today, I had to drill it out because it was about 3mm to small, after that it fit perfectly. It has been running flawlessly producing filament for the last three hours, from initial measurements, it appears to be at a fairly constant diameter and no major kinks.

Quadcopter
You might have seen my previous post that featured my not so abbreviated history of all my flying objects. I will attempt to keep this short and sweet, so here we go. I got a new quadcopter on wednesday, my Father got home from Las Vegas, and there he decided to get me a quadcopter. This is unlike any other RC aircraft I have every owned, it gets out of the toy grade RC range. It gets into a more hobby grade RC aircraft, it is far faster, far bigger, and has a far longer flight time. It is the Rotor Concepts Discovery. It offers tons of features not found on any toy grade RC aircraft. It has a 30 minute non-stop flight time, can carry up to one pound(which is more than most cameras weigh), has a 1.5 mile range, and has a few super super cool GPS features.

Two of the coolest GPS features are stay, and return home. In stay mode, you set a location that you want it to stay at and it stays there, if the wind blows it off course it will automatically fly back to that location, I wish I had this when I used to play football. I would be pretty amazing to set it to stay 100 feet above the football field, and have it film the game from there. The other feature is return home, whenever the quadcopter gets out of range or gets on low battery. It will return to position that you began flying from. I have not been able to go to an open field and fly it yet because of 20 MPH winds(it is rated for 15 MPH winds), however I have flown it in my backyard which has less wind and it seems stable. Once, the wind dies, I will go to a field and test all the GPS features, then write a full review.